How about a Tele-Handler? We have a decent forklift for moving things like the Covet and flipping crashed vans back over, but what about something that would pick up the whole van? Like a Tele-Handler. I have searched for it but found nothing. Alongside this what about a proper 3 claw scrap grab, we have the DM crane, but what about a proper scrap yard grabber?
I have some suggestions: (imported from here) 1988 Ibishu Trekker: A Japanese 4x4 based on 1988 Nissan Pathfinder (imported from here) 2011 Ibishu Voyage: A Japanese minivan based on US-Spec 2011 Honda Odyssey (imported from here) 2012 Hirochi San: A Japanese hatchback based on 2012 Mazda 3 (imported from here) 2013 Civeta Turin: An European sports car based on 2013 Alfa Romeo 4C (imported from here) 1970 Bruckell Transmerican Gen. 3: An American luxury landboat based on 1970 Lincoln Continental (imported from here) 1971 Gavril Woody: An American wagon based on 1971 Ford LTD Country Squire
I so wish I had the hatch over my sedan, however mine has those same wheels, which I find to be quite attractive on the Gen Pu. Hey, you could call the new Ibishu or Hirochi hatchback the Genpu (jen-poo) that seems to be a nickname for my body style 3. god i love my daily
Romanised Japanese the g is a hard g rather than soft. Japanese language has no concept for a letter to have a different phoneme depending on the context and characters around it. G would always be a hard g rather than sometimes hard or sometimes soft etc. A, ah E, eh I, ee O, oh U, ooh. Yes English vowels, but romanised Japanese pronunciations. If the I looks weird being pronounced as we would pronounce e, just go watch someone pronounce kawaii. As for senpai. Refers to a mentor or superior. To correctly address a kid in the year above you, he would be a senpai. Your supervisor at work, senpai. Fun one. Baka means idiot or fool. Bakasan is therefore "Mr Idiot". San, Mr, miss or Mrs, its gender neutral. Chan, used as a term of endearment. The Japanese " honorifics" are suffixes rather than prefixes as in English. I'd be 6677san rather than Mr 6677. Or Katiechan, or kinect-senpai. I do not actually speak Japanese but I do have quite some interest.
Damnit, Japanese and their multi-meaning word. San are also mean "three" in Japanese. Genpu sounds nice, although a bit like a name for something middle-aged in Japan. Still, better than call it Mr. Hirochi
Paramount Group Marauder (imported from here) - - - Updated - - - First Lamborghini Veneno Roadster (imported from here)
A folkracing car like fiat 350 or volvo 240 wagon would be pretty nice . I don't think it wouldn't be that hard (i don't know if it is hard or naw) since the cars don't have allot of details on them.